What’s a hallucination but the position of electrons in a brain? This brain could exist in a different dimension, but it would still have to exist and its electrons would still have to be able to move.
This is because you consider matter as a given, and the mind (consciousness) a function of matter. I, on the other hand, consider consciousness as a given, and all matter (including that of which consciousness is supposedly a function) as possibly no more than figments of the imagination. It’s the spirit/matter dichotomy. There are two ways to solve this. The first is to consider matter the only reality, and “the spirit” only a function of matter; the second is to consider spirit the only reality, and “matter” only an invention of the spirit. Indeed, for spirit (consciousness) to be possible, there must be the idea of matter; but it need not be true.
=D>
Interesting propositions guys,i really enthusiastically enjoy your madness,really,i do.
I will be watching more closely on how you guys like to befuddle each others…so…please continue to get no closer to the truth on the subject of ontology by being a typical egoists in internet discussion forums.
The always present unified field.